Chrissy

472 posts

Chrissy

Chrissy

@Wetachi

London Katılım Ocak 2022
21 Takip Edilen13 Takipçiler
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@iamurbanaira @SolaAdebayo_ @ukhomeoffice Fyi benefits includes child benefit, free/subsidised childcare,tax credits&other perks. It's more than job seekers allowance for the unemployed, which ironically migrants are already eligible for if they lose their job as it's not classed as public funds.
English
0
0
1
32
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@iamurbanaira @SolaAdebayo_ @ukhomeoffice You don't have to be unemployed to claim benefits. Low earners qualify for in-work benefits to top up their pay so that's their concern. Hundreds of thousands of migrants post Brexit are in low paid work and will be eligible for benefits with ILR even if they are still in work
English
1
0
2
132
King Urbanaira
King Urbanaira@iamurbanaira·
Can someone tell @ukhomeoffice we don’t really need that benefits or public funds … we just want be able to work freely without restriction
English
10
44
221
48.2K
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Funminz @ikeijeh Gosh, that was bad.... Remember when the government bought water cannons to deal with them lol
English
1
0
1
8
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Funminz @ikeijeh Bread, as if... They were looting trainers and PlayStations lol and they set fire to buildings in Croydon
English
2
0
0
27
Ike Ijeh
Ike Ijeh@ikeijeh·
This is not a black problem, children do not generally behave like this in Ethiopia. However, it would be foolish to ignore the fact that the majority of youths in Clapham's disorder seem to be black. If we're too afraid to ask why this started, we'll never find out how it stops.
Ike Ijeh tweet media
English
807
475
3.8K
389.9K
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Funminz @ikeijeh Hmm, true, youth clubs will help But I also think they are trying it because they know there will be little to no consequences. The police are afraid they'll be called racist if they are seen to be heavy handed with black kids.
English
1
0
0
13
Funmi
Funmi@Funminz·
@Wetachi @ikeijeh 😂 🤣 Some don't want to say it. Those activities cost money, there are clubs they could have gone swimming, skills acquisition, etc.
English
1
0
1
5
Funmi
Funmi@Funminz·
@Wetachi @ikeijeh Yeah. They are on holiday they can be out like normal people or stay at home. Looks very mixed the crowd. Too much time on their hands and social media link up.
English
1
0
1
8
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Funminz @ikeijeh No of course not, was just saying that schools are out for Easter. I can't stand behaviour like this and I hope as many as possible are caught and reprimanded. It's almost as bad as the 2011 riots.
English
1
0
1
12
Funmi
Funmi@Funminz·
@ikeijeh Where are their parents, why are they hanging around after school.
English
2
0
2
153
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@BidexPorche @hoffman_noa They don't have to leave their jobs to go on benefits though. There are in-work benefits such as universal credit which many migrants will qualify for when they get ILR based on their low earnings. Charities like IPRR are making the case for access to benefits for migrants.
English
0
0
3
92
Bidemi
Bidemi@BidexPorche·
@hoffman_noa No legal migrant is after benefit. I repeat no legal migrant that is working and contributing to the economy is waiting to get ilr and leave his or her job to go then reply on benefits
English
6
1
5
894
Noa Hoffman
Noa Hoffman@hoffman_noa·
This video hasn't gone down well with some Labour MPs. Luke Akehurst tells me: "Controlling immigration remains the main issue raised with me by my constituents in North Durham. With our public finances under strain we cannot afford to award the welfare rights accorded by ILR..."
Emily Thornberry@EmilyThornberry

Half of all migrant children currently live in poverty - an already shameful statistic. But the Earned Settlement model will see that poverty prolonged for 90,000 children in working migrant families. That's why my community says the Government must think again.

English
18
26
369
30.6K
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@charliecolecc Many immigrants also support the ILR changes because they see first hand the scale of abuse e.g.sham marriages for papers, like discussed in the thread below. Many are waiting till they get ILR and then they will divorce and bring in their real partners. x.com/lowarre_akins/…
YOUNG ÈRÌKÌNÀ #loveYourz #endSarz@lowarre_akins

The divorce wave whey go hit after una collect ILR or Pali ehn 😭😭🤣🤣 Please invite me to your divorce party oo I will attend for both partner involve.

English
2
0
1
354
Charlie Cole
Charlie Cole@charliecolecc·
We have to hope that Shabana Mahmood gets her way and implements the reforms she wants. Polling from YouGov, More in Common and BMG shows that voters support the proposed ILR reforms. The Government must not back down.
max tempers@maxtempers

Bleak. There’s something very broken in our system where massive multibillion pound “non-fiscal” decisions like the below can be made on a whim, with v little rigorous deliberation. Meanwhile, if you want to spend £50m on a discrete project, you will face thousands of blockers.

English
4
8
117
4.2K
🍷
🍷@insandostrants·
@roganj0sh @XYTI0 Free market. Thatcherism. People come and go.
English
1
0
1
161
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Supasolnicguy2 @Winterknight89 @PeterStefanovi2 Care workers and their families do not pay IHS and their visa fees are very low compared to other migrants e.g. main applicant and non-British dependents on a spouse visa have to renew every 2.5 years and they all pay full IHS and full visa app fees. Some are on a 10 yr route.
English
0
0
0
16
Peter Stefanovic
Peter Stefanovic@PeterStefanovi2·
The Prime Minister’s plan to offer rapid routes to settlement for those earning six-figure salaries whilst punishing and making lower-paid workers wait up to 15 years appears to be based on the notion that care workers are “low-skilled” because they are low-paid - its an absolute disgrace. Care work is highly skilled work and only paid so poorly because of the failure of successive governments to value it properly.
Peter Stefanovic@PeterStefanovi2

THE PRIME MINISTERS SHAMEFUL IMMIGRATION PLAN WILL CHANGE THE RULES FOR MIGRANT CARE WORKERS It will keep them in a temporary status for a decade or more, make them more easily exploitable, poorer and marginalised. WHEN DID THAT BECOME THE POLICY OF A LABOUR GOVERNMENT?

English
27
141
277
30.5K
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Supasolnicguy2 @Winterknight89 @PeterStefanovi2 1. The benefits referenced are child benefit and in-work UC. There are others such as housing support etc 2. The study is based on the low incomes of care workers and how many children are already living in poverty which will be prolonged if they are denied ILR and benefits
English
0
0
0
35
Omokpa kpataki
Omokpa kpataki@Supasolnicguy2·
@Wetachi @Winterknight89 @PeterStefanovi2 1. The benefits you are talking about is not clearly stated whether its State Pension which they are entitled to after years of paying into the system. 2. The study is based on the outcome of families being forced to pay huge amounts for visa applications
English
1
0
2
23
Omokpa kpataki
Omokpa kpataki@Supasolnicguy2·
@Wetachi @Winterknight89 @PeterStefanovi2 What evidence do they have to support that? Another group is also claiming that care workers will migrate to other profession after ILR to earn more thereby creating shortage in the care sector. So what do they really want?
English
1
0
0
63
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Supasolnicguy2 @Winterknight89 @PeterStefanovi2 After ILR. The argument is that due to their low income, care workers will be eligible for in-work benefits such as child benefit and universal credit when they can access it after ILR
English
1
0
0
68
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@craigritchieee @SSaravanagane @NeilForPoole Care workers, nurses and doctors,as well as their dependents, do not pay the health surcharge and their visa fees are very low. In contrast the foreign spouse and dependents of the average Brit pays considerably more to live in the UK, also with NRPF
English
0
0
0
38
Craig
Craig@craigritchieee·
@SSaravanagane @NeilForPoole Fair enough if they are net drains but these “legal” care workers, nurses and doctors probably pay more into the exchequer than your average brit, visa fees, health surcharge, income taxes, ni and everything else you pay they pay in too
English
2
0
0
103
Neil Duncan-Jordan MP
Neil Duncan-Jordan MP@NeilForPoole·
The Government's so-called "Earned Settlement" proposals are upside down. Underpaid social workers contributing to their community will get shafted. Punishing these workers doesn't support cohesion or assimilation - it does the opposite.
English
31
82
256
14.6K
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Ahmed70919634 @cgdav135 Care workers -also anyone on a health and care visa - and their dependents pay zero IHS fees and very little visa fees.
English
1
0
3
72
Ahmed qr
Ahmed qr@Ahmed70919634·
@cgdav135 Skilled Worker s are not entitled to any public funds. Also known as benefits. They pay thousands in visa fees, ihs fee and taxes for 5 years before settlement. And the time of getting ILR they pay again. Roughly it cost them 8000 pounds per person from visa till settlement
English
1
0
2
472
Chrissy
Chrissy@Wetachi·
@Ahmed70919634 @matt_dathan Because for 5 years they were forbidden from claiming benefits. After ILR full benefits will be offered to them. It is not a silly assumption that they will take whatever they are now eligible for.
English
1
0
0
86
Ahmed qr
Ahmed qr@Ahmed70919634·
@matt_dathan People who survived without a single penny of benefits for 5 years. Paid thousands in visa fee, ihs fee and taxes. How come they all start taking benefits after settlement. Silly argument based on just assumptions
English
1
0
1
826
Matt Dathan
Matt Dathan@matt_dathan·
Excl: New analysis shows plans to impose the new 10-year settlement rules to migrants already in the UK will increase child poverty by 90,000. Labour rebels have seized on the findings to argue that the policy conflicts with the party's pledge to reduce child poverty. They are planning to force a symbolic vote in parliament to expose the scale of opposition to the plans on the Labour benches. thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…
English
142
53
208
283.7K
Mike Tapp MP
Mike Tapp MP@MikeTappTweets·
Not understanding a policy is not justification for attacking it. There is no “row back” on settlement. The period is extending from 5 to 10 years. As has always been the case, and explained consistently, we have just closed a consultation that considers transitional arrangements and potential exemptions. Further decisions are currently being made after the 200k responses are analysed. I am in the Home Office to deliver for the country, these changes are needed given the unmanageable pace and scale of change we have seen, we are preventing 1.6 million having access to the already buckling welfare system, over a short period of time. None of this means we do not value contribution of migrants, quite the opposite. The new system will reward contribution and integration. Polling shows that the changes we are making are popular, because they are necessary. We said we’d put country first before the election, that is what we are doing.
English
131
38
337
44K